2D14-4561 / Florida Digestive Health Specialists, LLP. v. Colina , 202 So. 3d 94 ( 2016 )


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  •               NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    FLORIDA DIGESTIVE HEALTH                  )
    SPECIALISTS, LLP, a Florida Limited       )
    Liability Partnership, and RAMON E.       )
    COLINA, M.D., LLC,                        )
    )
    Appellants/Cross-Appellees, )
    )
    v.                                        )          Case No. 2D14-4561
    )
    RAMON E. COLINA, M.D., an individual, )
    and INTERCOASTAL MEDICAL GROUP, )
    INC., a Florida corporation,              )
    )
    Appellees/Cross-Appellants. )
    ___________________________________)
    Opinion filed September 7, 2016.
    Appeal pursuant to Fla. R. App. P. 9.130
    from the Circuit Court for Sarasota County;
    Charles E. Williams, Judge.
    George G. Mahfood of Broad and Cassel,
    Miami; and Bill J. Edwards and Mark M.
    Barber of Broad and Cassel, Tampa, for
    Appellants/Cross-Appellees.
    Michael S. Taaffe and David L. Wyant, Jr. of
    Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick, LLP, Sarasota;
    and Daniel C. Guarnieri of Berlin Patten
    Ebling, PLLC, Sarasota, for Appellee/Cross-
    Appellant Ramon E. Colina, M.D.
    Thomas H. Dart and Ryan W. Owen of
    Adams and Reese LLP, Sarasota, for
    Appellee/Cross-Appellant Intercoastal
    Medical Group, Inc.
    ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO ENFORCE MANDATE
    PER CURIAM.
    In Florida Digestive Health Specialists, LLP v. Colina, 
    192 So. 3d 491
    (Fla.
    2d DCA 2015), appeal filed, No. SC15-2246 (Fla. Dec. 4, 2015), this court affirmed in
    part and reversed in part an order granting Florida Digestive Health Specialists' (FDHS)
    temporary injunction to enforce a restrictive covenant against its former employee, Dr.
    Ramon E. Colina. 1 We specifically instructed that on remand, the trial court was
    required "to grant the temporary injunction prohibiting Dr. Colina from violating Section
    8.1 of the Partner Professional Services Agreement, to strike that portion of the
    [temporary injunction] which enjoins Dr. Colina from disparaging FDHS, and to more
    narrowly define the manner in which Dr. Colina is prohibited from interfering with
    FDHS's client base." Fla. Digestive Health 
    Specialists, 192 So. 3d at 494-95
    . The
    mandate issued on December 4, 2015.
    On remand, the trial court initially entered an order which only minimally
    complied with this court's mandate. In its January 2016 order, the trial court deleted the
    paragraphs of its original order finding that Dr. Colina was not obligated to comply with
    1This court sua sponte withdrew the prior opinion in the case to add a
    footnote stating that our opinion did not address an issue which was not raised on
    cross-appeal by Dr. Colina.
    -2-
    Section 8.1 of the Partner Professional Services Agreement (the Agreement), permitting
    Dr. Colina to remain employed by Intercoastal Medical Group, Inc. (IMG), and
    prohibiting Dr. Colina from disparaging FDHS during the pendency of the litigation and
    from interfering in FDHS's client base. 2 Notwithstanding the clear directive of this court,
    the trial court did not grant the temporary injunction prohibiting Dr. Colina from violating
    Section 8.1 of the Agreement by maintaining his employment with IMG, nor did it more
    narrowly define the manner in which Dr. Colina is prohibited from interfering with
    FDHS's client base.
    FDHS immediately filed a motion to enforce the mandate of this court,
    which was set for hearing in April 2016. In the motion, FDHS requested that the court
    comply with our mandate by modifying the original order granting the injunction such
    that Dr. Colina would be enjoined from violating Section 8.1 of the Agreement and
    therefore prohibited from working for IMG. At the hearing on the motion, Dr. Colina and
    IMG argued that the issue was moot because the two-year period of the restrictive
    covenant at issue had expired in November 2015, prior to the issuance of this court's
    mandate. In response, FDHS argued that Section 8.8 of the Agreement provided that
    the two-year restrictive covenant period was tolled during any period in which Dr. Colina
    was in violation of the restrictive covenant and that, as a result, the two-year period
    should begin from the date the court entered its order enjoining Dr. Colina from working
    for IMG and otherwise violating Section 8.1.
    2The court also stayed the matter pending a bond hearing, despite the fact
    that a bond had already been set, approved by the court, posted with the clerk of court,
    and was not invalidated by this court's opinion.
    -3-
    In its May 2016 order on the motion to enforce the mandate, the trial court
    neither granted nor denied the motion; instead, it found that the date upon which the
    injunction would begin on remand was not addressed in this court's opinion and it
    adopted Dr. Colina and IMG's argument "in support of this decision." FDHS moved for
    reconsideration of the trial court's apparent adoption of the mootness argument, citing
    authority for the proposition that restrictive covenant timeframes begin when the
    injunction is entered. Before a hearing could be held on the motion, FDHS
    simultaneously filed its motion to enforce mandate with this court and its notice of
    appeal of the court's May 2016 order. 3
    Our directive to the trial court in this case was clear: enjoin Dr. Colina from
    violating Section 8.1 of the Agreement, more narrowly define the terms of the injunction
    prohibiting Dr. Colina from interfering with FDHS's clients, and strike the portion of the
    injunction preventing Dr. Colina from disparaging FDHS. Our instructions should have
    resulted in an injunction preventing Dr. Colina from continuing his employment with IMG
    and otherwise violating Section 8.1 and from engaging in specific conduct which would
    improperly interfere with FDHS's client base. Instead, through its initial order deleting
    paragraphs and through its adoption of the mootness argument, the trial court
    effectively denied FDHS's motion for temporary injunction—a direct contravention of our
    mandate.
    This court "is vested with all the power and authority necessary for
    carrying into complete execution all of its judgments, decrees, orders, and
    determinations in the matters before it." § 35.08, Fla. Stat. (2015). "No principle of
    3Fla.   Digestive Health Specialists, LLP v. Colina, No. 2D16-2480.
    -4-
    appellate jurisdiction is more firmly established than the one which provides that a trial
    court utterly lacks the power to deviate from the terms of an appellate mandate."
    Mendelson v. Mendelson, 
    341 So. 2d 811
    , 813-14 (Fla. 2d DCA 1977). That is, "upon
    the issuance of our mandate, the trial court is without authority to take any action other
    than to compose an order carrying out the terms of the mandate." City of Miami Beach
    v. Arthree, Inc., 
    300 So. 2d 65
    , 67 (Fla. 3d DCA 1973). The trial court must execute the
    mandate without variance or examination; it may not review the mandate—"even for
    apparent error"—or grant any additional or further relief. Rinker Materials Corp. v.
    Holloway Materials Corp., 
    175 So. 2d 564
    , 565 (Fla. 2d DCA 1965) (quoting In re
    Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 
    160 U.S. 247
    , 255 (1895)). Further, "any motion or petition to
    vary the judgment of this court may not be entertained without the express permission
    of this court to do so." 
    Arthree, 300 So. 2d at 67
    .
    We note that although the issue of the effective date of an injunction to be
    entered on remand from an appeal was not before this court when we issued the
    opinion in this case, our mandate necessarily subsumed the existing law that "[w]here
    there has been a delay in the entry of a non-compete injunction enforceable under
    section 542.335(1)(c), the party seeking to enforce the non-compete clause is entitled to
    . . . the enforcement of the full non-compete period specified in the agreement between
    the parties." Anakarli Boutique, Inc. v. Ortiz, 
    152 So. 3d 107
    , 109 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014)
    (footnote omitted) (citing § 542.335(1)(c), Fla. Stat. (2012)); see also Atomic Tattoos,
    LLC v. Morgan, 
    45 So. 3d 63
    , 66 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010) (reversing denial of temporary
    injunction and remanding with instructions to "enter a temporary injunction to begin on
    the date on which the trial court enters its order"); Xerographics, Inc. v. Thomas, 537
    -5-
    So. 2d 140, 143 (Fla. 2d DCA 1988) (reversing and remanding for entry of a permanent
    injunction "for a period of one year from the issuance of the trial court's order"); Orkin
    Exterminating Co. v. Bailey, 
    550 So. 2d 563
    , 565 (Fla. 4th DCA 1989) (remanding for
    entry of amended orders granting temporary injunctions and directing that "the
    injunctions shall be for a period of two years beginning on the date the amended orders
    are entered"). Dr. Colina has been in violation of Section 8.1 of the Agreement since he
    began his employment with IMG. FDHS has yet to receive the benefit of its bargain,
    and "[i]t would be stunningly unfair if the law held that a valid non-compete clause could
    be nullified because the non-compete period was devoured by the time it took to appeal
    an erroneous ruling" of the trial court. 
    Anakarli, 152 So. 3d at 109
    .
    The motion to enforce mandate is granted. The trial court is again
    instructed to enter an order granting the temporary injunction prohibiting Dr. Colina from
    violating Section 8.1 of the Partner Professional Services Agreement and prohibiting Dr.
    Colina from interfering with FDHS's client base in specific, not impermissibly vague,
    terms. The two-year injunctive period shall commence on the date the order is entered
    on remand.
    MORRIS, BLACK, and SLEET, JJ., Concur.
    -6-